November 30, 2014

I
was born in Arad, a fairly large city for Romanian standards located on the
Hungarian border in the western part of Transylvania.As I mentioned before in this blog, the
German, Austrian and Hungarian influences are strikingly visible everywhere in
my city from the grand architecture to the rich and flavorful food.But recently, a thick tide of Italian interests,
businesses and investors added a new dimension to the food scene of my humble
hometown with Italian restaurants springing up like mushrooms after rain.In no time, Romanians happily embraced the
new cuisine with many local owners striving to keep it as authentic as possible
with just the right amount of Romanian touch.My parents were no exception and for several years, they owned the most
popular Italian restaurant in town, Il
Padrino.

Il Padrino, a
very suitable name for the two story restaurant, was a place that screamed
Italian flair from the dark green linens and deep brown wooden chairs to the
intrinsic movie-based artwork displayed all over the white walls, and the
faithful, real Italian patrons that would mob to the restaurant every time they
came to town.The locale had an
extensive menu that incorporated homemade pasta dishes, thin crust wood oven
pizza, mouthwatering meat plates and antipasti, fresh salads, and delicious
Romanian offerings interjected through the menu to satisfy the demanding local
palette.But what would please any
palette, Romanian and Italian alike, would be the ever-present tiramisu.This iconic coffee-flavored Italian dessert
would always do the trick.

Leafing
through this month’s Food & Wine issue,
I came across a very intriguing tiramisu recipe that brilliantly incorporates
the season’s most valued ingredient.Curiosity won out and I had to try it.So glad I did!The Pumpkin Tiramisu is everything a
classic tiramisu should be plus the added bonus of the pumpkin.The layers of coffee-soaked ladyfingers and
smooth pumpkin-spiced mousse topped with sweet whipped cream, a dust of cocoa
powder, shaved chocolate and peppery candied ginger meld in a beautiful
carnival of autumn flavors.Although
this Pumpkin Tiramisu is intended to
be a fancy trifle dessert, if you’re like me and don’t own a proper trifle dish
and don’t entertain the thought of buying one, I can fully attest that the end
result looks beautiful and is just as wonderfully tasty in a plain cake pan. I hope you had a lovely Thanksgiving!

Pumpkin Tiramisu

Adapted
from Food & Wine (November 2014)

Makes:12 servings

Ingredients:

·1 15-oz. can pumpkin puree

·½ cup light brown sugar

·¾ teaspoon ground ginger

·¾ teaspoon ground cinnamon

·¼ teaspoon kosher salt

·Pinch of ground nutmeg

·¾ cup granulated sugar

·1 ½ cups mascarpone cheese, at room
temperature

·2 ½ cups heavy cream

·2 cups brewed coffee, cooled

·2 7-oz. packages dry ladyfingers

·Cocoa powder, chocolate shavings and candied
ginger, for garnish

Instructions:

In a
large bowl, whisk the pumpkin puree with the brown sugar, ginger, cinnamon,
salt, nutmeg and ½ cup of the granulated sugar.Add the mascarpone cheese and 1 ½ cups of the heavy cream.Using an electric mixer, beat the pumpkin
mixture at medium speed until soft peaks form; do not overbeat.

In a
medium bowl, whisk the brewed coffee with 2 Tablespoons of the granulated sugar
until it’s dissolved.Dip both sides of
the ladyfingers in the coffee and arrange them flat, one by one, in a single
layer in the bottom of a 14 by 10-inch baking pan.Spread half of the pumpkin mousse on
top.Layer the remaining ladyfingers
over the pumpkin mousse.Spread the remaining
pumpkin mousse on top.Cover and
refrigerate the tiramisu overnight.

In a
large bowl, using an electric mixer, beat the remaining 1 cup of cream with the
remaining 2 Tablespoons of granulated sugar until soft peaks form.Spread the whipped cream over the tiramisu,
dust with cocoa powder, garnish with shaved chocolate and candied ginger and
serve.

Note:If you have a trifle dish and intend to use
it, this is how you adjust the recipe.Follow the instructions up to dissolving the 2 Tablespoons of sugar in
the brewed coffee.Then, dip both sides
of 6 ladyfingers in the coffee and arrange them in a single layer in a 4-quart
trifle dish.Spread 1 cup of the pumpkin
mousse on top.Repeat the layering 5
more times, ending with a layer of the pumpkin mousse.Cover and refrigerate the tiramisu
overnight.Once you’ve prepared the
whipped cream, dollop the whipped cream over the tiramisu, dust with cocoa
powder and garnish with shaved chocolate and candied ginger and serve.I hope you all had a lovely Thanksgiving!